About two years ago I copied the folllowing passage out of an article
I was reading and didn't note the author or source. Does anyone
recognize it? Whose language is it? Where was it published?

"Ideally, a liberal education produces persons who are open-minded
and free from provincialism, dogma, preconception, and ideology;
conscious of their opinions and judgments; reflective of their actions;
and aware of their place in the social and natural worlds."

Which are, according to you, the electronic magazines (e.g.: scholar, reach, th
at of J. O'Donnell - I don't remember the title) most interesting for a classic
al scholar?
Could you answer directly to me or CC: to me?
Thank you.
Maurizio

A student of mine is interested in getting training in librarianship,
esp. rare books. She understands that there are a number of programs
that combine this specific area with grad studies in English, and knows
that the Columbia program is now defunct (I gather it went with the
library school). I would appreciate any information folks can send. This
seems more appropriate to an off-list response.

Dear Fellow Humanists--
Please, before I make a fool of myself and waste a lot of time on an
already-done topic, could someone tell me if there are tagged texts of
classical Latin in machine tractable form? I've asked similar questions
in the past and have received no replies, so I'm tempted to begin saying
that there are none. (I'm not entirely sure what it is that LASLA has,
although the directors have sent a list.)
Thanks for any help you can give
--Peg Kershenbaum
kersh@watson.ibm.com